Read Burying Ben Online

Authors: Ellen Kirschman

Tags: #Fiction, #Retail, #Suspense, #Thriller

Burying Ben (36 page)

BOOK: Burying Ben
7.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I hold up a copy of a letter addressed to Chief Baxter and read it aloud. “Based on the standard psychological screening data, I find
that
the
applica
n
t,
Benj
a
m
in
Go
m
ez, does not
m
eet the psychological qualifications
required by
G
overn
m
ent Code 1031 (f).”

It is signed by Mark Edis
o
n, Ph.D. My na
m
e is
still on the l
e
tt
er
head. My hands are tre
m
bling. I gi
v
e the l
e
tt
e
r to Gary.

He frowns and says, ”Mark turn
e
d him
down and the c
h
i
e
f
still
h
i
red hi
m
?

“He couldn

t have. It

s against the law to hire someone who hasn

t got the requisite psychological qualifications.”

“Could someone have changed the recom
m
enda
t
ion
?

“Mark told
m
e he upgraded his entire co
m
puter syste
m
, that all his reports are encrypted. So
m
eone would need a password to
unscra
m
ble the code and change the recom
m
endation.”

Suddenly I feel drained, exhausted. The smoke from
Gary

s pipe is
m
aking
m
e nauseous. I haven

t eaten all day. I lean against Gary

s couch. All I want to do is sleep.

“How in hell am
I going to find out
w
ho did this, Gary? I’m
not even allowed in the building.”

Chapter Thirty
Six

 

 

Eddie Ri
m
b
auer

s apart
m
ent house in East Kenilworth is behind a shopping center. It has all the architectural charm of
a cheap
m
otel. The balconies are cram
m
ed with bicycles, boxes, baby carria
g
es and weightlifting benches.
L
aundry hangs over the railings.
W
i
ndows are covered with bed
s
preads and sheets. The occasio
n
al hanging curtain is knotted at the bottom
to let in air.
W
recked and rusting shopping carts stand sentinel in the overgro
w
n yard. The air is r
e
dolent with garbage
a
nd dirty diapers. A cacophony
o
f
sounds creates the illu
s
i
on of villa
g
e life – the clatter of
pots,
chil
d
ren cr
y
ing and laughing, the brassy blare of
Norteño
m
usic and the soft
m
u
r
m
ur of conversation.

I don’t really want to see hi
m
, but I
have no other choice. The door to his apart
m
ent is partially ajar. I knock. There

s no response. I push the door open into the tiny living roo
m
. Eddie is passed out in a
recliner in front of the TV, watching a basketball
g
a
m
e with t
h
e sound off. There

s
a can of beer in his hand. His face is
m
ore bloated than it was a week ago. Broken ca
p
illaries
spread
across
his nose like fine netting. It

s a waste of ti
m
e to talk to h
i
m
in this condition. The door squeaks as I pull it closed.
E
ddie blasts awake like a soldi
e
r who has fallen asleep in the
m
i
ddle of a battle.

He l
o
oks wildly around the r
o
om
until his eyes settle
o
n
m
e.

W
hat the fuc
k
? Where am
I
?”

“In your apart
m
ent. Your living roo
m
.”


W
hat the fuck are you doing here?
I ain

t
g
oing to no rehab place. I told Fran, I

m not going.”

He pushes hi
m
self o
f
f the recliner without retrac
t
ing the footrest and falls on the floor. His t-shirt is soiled and his belly s
p
ills over his pants. His hair is
m
atted with sleep.

”I need to piss.” He turns over, pushes
hi
m
self to his hands and knees and pulls hi
m
self up by hanging onto the chair. He wobbles down a short hall, opens a door and unzips his pants.


W
hat the fuck
?
” he says,
slams the door and opens another.

I hear him urinating, a long, heavy strea
m
. I go down the h
a
ll and open the first door. It

s a clothes clos
e
t and
fr
o
m
the s
m
ell, this isn

t t
h
e
f
i
rst ti
m
e he

s
m
i
staken it
f
or the
ba
throo
m
. I scoot back into the living room. He co
m
e
s back and drops onto the chair. It bounces under his weight, the legs scraping the bare floor.

“Do you have any coffee
?

“In the kitchen.” He nods to a pair of louvered doors. There a
r
e holes in the walls on either side of the doors where the knobs
have splintered the paint and dented the sheetr
o
ck. His tiny
k
itc
h
en is bare e
x
cept for t
h
ree s
m
all cactus plants shriveling on t
h
e window ledge over the sink and a salt and pepp
e
r set of co
m
i
cal cera
m
i
c pigs. There

s a cheap coffee pot and a can of generic coffee
on the counter. It

s the only thing in the kitchen that looks used. While the coffee is brewing, I open the door
to
the
refrigerator. It

s filled with beer. There are p
a
cka
g
ed dinners from
Fran

s in the freez
e
r. I re
m
e
m
ber when Eddie showed up at
m
y place unannounced and
m
ocked
m
e for livi
n
g in a barren house. Compared to his, I live in a castle. The
r
e

s a full set of restaur
a
nt style plates and a drawer full of silverware,
m
ore gifts from
Fran. I pour the co
f
f
ee and go back into the living roo
m
. Eddie is sitting, slack-jawed, in
his recliner. There

s a cooler on the floor next to
h
i
s chair and
h
e reaches for
another beer. I hand him
the coffee.

“Sorry about the
m
ess. I wasn

t
expecting co
m
pany. You shoulda
m
ade an appoint
m
ent.” His words are slurry. “Didn

t know you
m
ade
house calls.” He swigs the coffee like it was a beer and s
p
ews it out. “Fucking hot.”


It

s coffee, it

s supposed to be hot,” I say. He looks confused.

“I need to talk to you. But I need you to be sober.”

“I’m
on
m
y four day. I

ll be shit faced
until
m
y Monday. Have a seat. You
take the couch for a change.”

He laughs at his joke.
B
eside the ancient
recliner and the couch, there

s only a phony wood coffee table with
a chipped corner and the television. Newspapers and paperback books are stacked in
corners. The walls are bare. He watches
m
e looking around.

“Not exactly House and Garden, but it

s
a
ll I can get for what I have after ali
m
ony pay
m
ents.”

“You don

t look well. Things rough at work
?

“Not at
a
ll
.
” He
m
akes an elabo
r
ate
sw
eeping ge
s
ture with his
arm
and spills
m
ore coffee. “Everything

s peachy. I love the front desk. Helping the upstanding citizens of Kenilworth with their traffic tickets – the ones
they don

t deserve, of course. Beats the hell out of working the street.”

“How
m
uch
are
you drinking
?

“Don

t start on
m
e. I got Fran crawling up
m
y ass every other day.”

“I need your help, and you can

t help
m
e if you

r
e drunk.”

“I can’t help you if I’m
s
ober. I don’t know shit. R
e
m
e
m
ber?
I’m
the guy who sat next to Gomez for ten hours a day and d
i
dn’t recognize hi
m
.” He drains his coffee cup and hands it to
m
e. “Ref
i
ll,“ he says. I pour him
a second cup. “
W
hat do you want?”

I tell him
about the encrypted
report and
m
y suspicions
that so
m
eone at the P.D. changed the report from
fail to pass. He looks at
m
e with puzzled eyes. “Crips in Kenilworth?
W
hat kinda Crips you talk
i
ng about?
Crips and Bloods?”

I explain encryption the best I ca
n
. Eddie puts his cof
f
ee down, reaches for a beer and pops the lid.

“I don

t know fucking-A about co
m
p
uters.
I’m
a fucking dinosaur. To
m
e, a co
m
puter is a glorified typewriter. Took
m
e
fu
c
king forever to learn how to use the one in the
c
r
ui
se
r.”

“I’m
not allowed in the building, Eddie. The chief

s threatened to have
m
e arrested if he sees me again. I need so
m
ebody on the inside to help
m
e.”

“Talk to
Mañana
. He

s a co
m
puter whiz. G
r
ew up with all that stuff. I think his mother had co
m
puter cables for tits.”

He laughs and then suddenly throws hi
m
self forward in his chair, slamming his feet and l
e
gs down on the footrest. It snaps back with a groan. For the
m
o
ment he looks sober. “Don

t
get the little beaner in
trouble. I’m
warning you, Doc. He

s a good kid. Don

t do a Go
m
ez on hi
m
.”

‘Go
m
ez’. That’s a verb
m
ade out of a noun
m
ade out of a once living hu
m
an being.

BOOK: Burying Ben
7.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Blood Ties by Hayes, Sam
Projection by Risa Green
In the Name of Love by Smith, Patrick
Kingdom of Lies by Zachrisen, Cato
Manhattan Nocturne by Colin Harrison
IT Manager's Handbook: Getting Your New Job Done by Bill Holtsnider, Brian D. Jaffe